For Chicago, it's the first move in an accelerated rebuilding process.

Because of the terms of Bynum's deal, the Bulls can cut him immediately and not owe him a dime of whatever is left on his $12.3 million deal. Combine that with the loss of Deng's $14.3 million salary, and the trade saves Chicago a ton of money in 2013-14.

In that sense, it's a salary dump. But it could pay dividends down the road.

As Sean Deveney of the Sporting News points out, the newfound financial flexibility (which would get even better if they got rid of the $16.6 million Carlos Boozer is owed in 2014-15) should give Chicago a better chance of bringing Nikola Mirotic to the NBA. Mirotic, a 23-year-old Spaniard, is perhaps the best basketball player not currently playing in the NBA. Chicago owns his draft rights, but convincing him to leave Real Madrid is going to take a mid-seven figure deal.

The Bulls now have more room to make a Mirotic deal work this summer.

Bynum isn't the most valuable part of this deal for Chicago, the draft picks are. Cleveland sent a 2014 first-round pick that they got from Sacramento to Chicago in the trade, as well as two second-rounders in future years.

The Bulls now have their own 2014 first-round pick, Charlotte's first-round pick (if it falls outside the top 10), and now Sacramento's first-round-pick (if it falls outside the top 12).

In all likelihood, that Sacramento pick won't fall outside the top 12, but Chicago still has it in their back pocket as a trade chip going forward. If they were to engineer a trade to replace Boozer with an All-Star caliber player, that pick could be valuable.